Dodd-Frank’s Missed Opportunity on Whistleblower Law

One of the highest-profile provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act is Section 922. That provision provides protection and monetary awards for whistleblowers. To qualify, the whistleblower must provide information to the Securities and Exchange Commission that leads to the recovery of …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Anthony J. Casey of University of Chicago Law School discusses Dodd-Frank’s Missed Opportunity on Whistleblower Law

How much does management influence shareholder votes?

In the paper, “Management Influence on Investors: Evidence from Shareholder Votes on the Frequency of Say on Pay”, which was recently made publicly available on SSRN, my co-author (David Oesch of the University of St. Gallen) and I …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Fabrizio Ferri of Columbia Business School discusses how much management influences the frequency of Say on Pay votes?

Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses How Companies Should Prepare for Potential Proxy Disclosure Litigation

Plaintiffs’ attorneys have continued to bring, or threaten, litigation against U.S. companies following the filing of their annual proxy statements. These complaints generally allege disclosure deficiencies in connection with the approval of equity compensation plans and/or the advisory shareholder “say-on-pay” …

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Editor's Tweet: Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses How Companies Should Prepare for Potential Proxy Disclosure Litigation

M&A Litigation: More and More Dysfunctional

Empirical scholars of corporate law are uncovering a rapidly changing and depressing pattern in M&A litigation. This new research dates from a series of articles in 2012 by Professors John Armour, Bernard Black and Brian Cheffins, which announced that Delaware …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor John Coffee of Columbia Law School discusses M&A Litigation and its increasing dysfunctional

Qualitative Disclosure & Financial Projects: Overshadowed Lessons from In re Ancestry.com

Chancellor Strine’s December 17, 2012 bench ruling in In re Ancestry.com Inc. Shareholder Litigation attracted immediate attention from M&A practitioners and scholars regarding the Chancellor’s comments on so-called “Don’t Ask, Don’t Waive” standstill provisions.[1]  That attention, however, overshadowed the …

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Editor's Tweet: S&C Krishna Veeraraghavan and Jason Tyler discuss overshadowed lessons from In re Ancestry.com

New York Officials Urge SEC To Adopt Rules Requiring Public Companies to Disclose Political Spending

This week, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli and New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to respond to a petition I co-authored with my colleagues John Coffee, Ronald Gilson and …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Robert Jackson. of Columbia Law School discusses New York's efforts to urge the SEC to act on political spending disclosure

Skadden Discusses Jumping the Gun: Social Media and IPO Communications Issues

Increasingly, companies are using social media, such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other platforms, to engage with clients, customers, employees, shareholders and other key constituents. Promising a fast and low-cost means of disseminating information, social media also offers the potential …

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Editor's Tweet: Skadden discusses gun jumping issues relating to social media and IPO communications.

Do Broker-Dealers Have a Green Light to Force Investors to Waive Class Actions in Court?

Virtually all brokerage firms’ customer agreements require arbitration of disputes in the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) forum.  FINRA regulates the contents of these predispute arbitration agreements (PDAAs) and prohibits broker-dealers from requiring customers to give up the right to …

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Editor's Tweet: Professors Barbara Black and Jill Gross discuss whether broker-dealers have a green light to force investors to waive class actions

Gibson Dunn discusses recent Delaware Chancery ruling rejecting settlement of M&A litigation

On February 28, 2013, Chancellor Leo E. Strine, Jr. of the Delaware Chancery Court issued a rare bench ruling rejecting a disclosure-only, negotiated settlement of an M&A stockholder lawsuit.  The decision, in In re Transatlantic Holdings Inc. Shareholders Litigation,

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Editor's Tweet: Gibson Dunn discusses recent Delaware Chancery ruling rejecting settlement of M&A litigation

The Separation of Ownership and Consumption

In our paper, The Evolution of Shareholder Voting Rights: Separation of Ownership and Consumption, which was recently made publicly available on SSRN, we show how the ownership patterns of early business corporations shaped their peculiar governance structure. While the …

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Editor's Tweet: Professors Henry Hansmann of Yale Law and Mariana Pargendler discuss the separation of ownership and consumption

Institutional Investors Should Not Facilitate Corporate “Ambushes”

The following post comes to us from Trevor Norwitz, a partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz in New York and a lecturer-in-law at Columbia Law School: 

In the upcoming proxy season, shareholders at several major corporations will be asked …

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Editor's Tweet: Wachtell's Trevor Norwitz explains why institutional investors should not facilitate corporate "ambushes."

Rakoff, Naftalis, and Brodsky Discuss the Gupta Insider Trading Case at Columbia Law School

On February 21, United States District Court Judge Jed S. Rakoff, federal prosecutor Reed Brodsky, and defense attorney Gary Naftalis, came together to discuss the Gupta insider trading case with Columbia Law School students in a seminar called Corporations in …

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Editor's Tweet: Gupta Case: Rakoff, Naftalis, and Brodsky Discuss at Columbia Law School

CEOs of J.P. Morgan and Rio Tinto Get Some Bad News in 2013

In a 2010 article in the Texas Law Review entitled “Embattled CEOs”, Professors Marcel Kahan and Ed Rock argued that, over the past decade or so, CEOs of US public companies have gradually been losing power to their boards and …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Jennifer G. Hill of the University of Sydney discusses bad news in 2013 for the CEOs of JPMorgan and Rio Tinto

Paul Weiss Discusses Kallick v. Sand Ridge Energy, Inc.

In Kallick v. SandRidge Energy, Inc., the Delaware Court of Chancery, in an opinion by Chancellor Strine, enjoined the incumbent board of SandRidge Energy, which faced a consent solicitation initiated by a large stockholder seeking to de-stagger and replace …

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Editor's Tweet: Paul Weiss Discusses Kallick v. Sand Ridge Energy, Inc.

Recent Delaware Developments: Three Cases with Surprising Outcomes that Reinforce Traditional Fiduciary Principles

In three relatively low profile decisions issued by the Delaware Court of Chancery in February 2013, the court reached seemingly atypical results given the issued involved and the procedural postures of the respective cases.  The first decision was on February …

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Editor's Tweet: S&C's Krishna Veeraraghavan & Jason S. Tyler discuss three recent Delaware cases with suprising outcomes

Scienter Pleading and Rule 10b-5: Empirical Analysis and Behavioral Implications

Although the volume of private securities class action filings has dropped recently, these lawsuits remain both a significant worry for issuers, investment banks, auditing firms and other potential defendants, and an arguably useful supplement to governmental enforcement of securities antifraud …

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Editor's Tweet: Professors Robert Prentice and Dain Donelson of University of Texas at Austin law discuss scienter pleading and Rule 10b-5